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    Bulk puppy food for Labs on a budget

    This is a specific conversation about Dog food — finding the right one — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.

    inparticular.ai
    Feeding four Labrador puppies at once is a real logistics exercise — you need something nutritionally solid for large-breed pups but priced sensibly enough that you're not haemorrhaging money before they even go to their new homes. Choosing dog food is genuinely complicated because the right answer depends on age, size, breed, and health, and the most expensive or most marketed options are not always the best fit. To point you in the right direction: what are you currently feeding them, are any of the four showing signs of loose stools, skin irritation, or anything else that might suggest a sensitivity, and are you buying from a cash-and-carry, a feed merchant, or online?
    They're all healthy so far, no issues. I'm currently using what the previous bag the dam was on — just a supermarket own-brand adult food I had in. Buying online is fine, I just need a big bag that won't cost a fortune. Four pups going through food fast.
    inparticular.ai
    Good that they're healthy, but worth switching off adult food now — at four months, Labs are in a critical bone and joint development window, and adult formulas don't have the right calcium-to-phosphorus ratio for growing large-breed dogs. That said, you don't need to spend a lot to fix that. One thing worth knowing: for large breeds like Labs, you actually want to avoid foods that are too calorie-dense or push very fast growth — that can stress developing joints. So something mid-range in protein and not loaded with fat is actually ideal, not a compromise. Can I ask — are you planning to feed wet, dry, or a mix? And roughly what's your budget per bag?
    Dry only, easier to manage in bulk. Budget-wise, I'd like to stay under £30 for a big bag if possible — something I can get on subscription or just reorder easily.
    inparticular.ai
    That's very doable. My recommendation is Wagg Puppy Complete Dry Dog Food — it comes in a 12kg bag and sits well under your budget. It's a complete kibble formulated specifically for puppies, with added vitamins and minerals including the right calcium levels for developing bones. It's not a premium boutique food, but it does the job properly for healthy puppies without exotic protein sources that can complicate things if you need to troubleshoot digestion later. For four Labs at four months, a 12kg bag will last roughly a week to ten days depending on portion sizes, and it's easy to reorder on Amazon. The ingredients are straightforward — chicken meal as the primary protein, no unnecessary fillers like sugar or artificial colours. Thousands of breeders use it for exactly this reason: it's honest, consistent, and affordable at scale. I'd transition them over five to seven days by mixing it with what they're currently eating to avoid stomach upset, since even a switch between decent foods can cause loose stools in young puppies.
    That sounds sensible. How much should I be feeding each pup at this age?
    inparticular.ai
    At four months, a Labrador puppy typically needs around 250–320g per day split across three meals, though the bag's feeding guide will give you the weight-specific breakdown — weigh your pups if you haven't recently, because Labs at this stage can vary quite a bit. Err on the side of the lower end of the range; Labs are notorious for acting permanently starving, and overfeeding at this age is a real risk for joint problems later. Three meals a day at this age is better than two — their digestive systems handle smaller, more frequent portions better, and it reduces the risk of bloat, which Labs can be prone to.
    Perfect, that's really helpful. I'll order the Wagg now.
    inparticular.ai
    Good call. One last thing worth noting: once the pups move to their new homes around eight weeks — or whenever that is for you — it's worth giving each new owner a small bag of the Wagg so they can transition gradually rather than switching cold. Saves the new owners a lot of stomach upset headaches in the first week, and it reflects well on you as a breeder. Good luck with the litter.

    Your situation is probably different. Get a specific answer for yours.

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